This article utilises the representation of the Chinese characters in the film Fire (1996) as a strategic site from which to examine the institutional marginalisation of India’s Chinese minority community since the Sino-Indian war of 1962. Through a close examination of diplomatic documents and white papers exchanged between the governments of China and India during the 1960s, publications of the Indian government on the Sino-Indian war as well as newspaper articles and film reviews on Fire, this article delineates how the film’s dehistoricised approach in representing Chinese minority voices and their criticisms against Indian society results in obscuring the legacy of the oppression of the Chinese community in India and in reiterating the...
Re-Orientalism, initially defined as the perpetration of Orientalism by ‘Orientals’ (Lau 2009), is a...
© 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This article examines British respon...
The recent debates within and beyond Marxism around empire and imperialism focus on deterritorializa...
How does India remember the 1962 border war with China? The article argues that there are two ways i...
Whereas the rare existing comparative studies of Chinese and Indian diaspora policies have focused o...
China and India claimed two territories along their borders on the Himalayas: Aksai Chin in the west...
By conducting discourse analysis on Chinese textual materials around 1962, this paper tries to induc...
In this paper, I outline a new approach towards media and diaspora using the concept of the ‘franchi...
China and India are comparable in size, complexity, and their relatively recent state-building histo...
After Indian Independence in 1947 and the founding of the People's Republic of China (PRC) in 1949, ...
Britain's post-war interventions in former colonial territories remain a controversial area of conte...
This paper aims at shedding some light on the cultural crossings and boundaries between two ancient ...
India’s relations with Communist China have evolved through various twists and turns. India’s lack o...
This article explores the actions taken to address the issue of covert Chinese activities in India d...
Although the Chinese in Kolkata have preserved their Chinese identity, they have been acculturated b...
Re-Orientalism, initially defined as the perpetration of Orientalism by ‘Orientals’ (Lau 2009), is a...
© 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This article examines British respon...
The recent debates within and beyond Marxism around empire and imperialism focus on deterritorializa...
How does India remember the 1962 border war with China? The article argues that there are two ways i...
Whereas the rare existing comparative studies of Chinese and Indian diaspora policies have focused o...
China and India claimed two territories along their borders on the Himalayas: Aksai Chin in the west...
By conducting discourse analysis on Chinese textual materials around 1962, this paper tries to induc...
In this paper, I outline a new approach towards media and diaspora using the concept of the ‘franchi...
China and India are comparable in size, complexity, and their relatively recent state-building histo...
After Indian Independence in 1947 and the founding of the People's Republic of China (PRC) in 1949, ...
Britain's post-war interventions in former colonial territories remain a controversial area of conte...
This paper aims at shedding some light on the cultural crossings and boundaries between two ancient ...
India’s relations with Communist China have evolved through various twists and turns. India’s lack o...
This article explores the actions taken to address the issue of covert Chinese activities in India d...
Although the Chinese in Kolkata have preserved their Chinese identity, they have been acculturated b...
Re-Orientalism, initially defined as the perpetration of Orientalism by ‘Orientals’ (Lau 2009), is a...
© 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This article examines British respon...
The recent debates within and beyond Marxism around empire and imperialism focus on deterritorializa...